Boeing to move ''really fast'' after FAA 787 approval

Boeing's commercial aircraft chief said Monday the company would move "really fast" to get its grounded 787s flying again after it wins approval from the FAA for its proposed battery fix.

Ray Conner, president and chief executive of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, speaking at a JP Morgan conference in New York, noted that the US aerospace giant had only presented its fix to the Federal Aviation Administration on February 22.

After 200,000 hours of analysis and tests, "we feel very good about the fix. We've covered the waterfront, so to speak," he said.

Once the FAA approves the plan, he said, "we will move really fast" with testing and certification to get the airplanes "out there."

Burnt lithium-ion batteries on two 787s -- a fire on a parked airplane in Boston and smoke that caused an emergency landing in Japan -- resulted in the January 16 global grounding of all 50 787s in service.

The Boeing CEO said the company would stick with the lithium-ion batteries, which are significantly more powerful and lighter than the nickel-cadmium batteries traditionally used on aircraft.

Throughout the analysis, "we couldn't see any reason to make a switch back," Conner said.

Conner tiptoed around a question about the decision by European rival Airbus, after the 787 groundings, to switch to nickel-cadmium batteries instead of ion-lithium for its new A350 being developed.